In the midst of the post–Harvey Weinstein "Me Too" movement, actress Caitlin O’Heaney is breaking her nondisclosure agreement (NDA) to share her harrowing story about working with Val Kilmer.

O'Heaney, who worked frequently in television and film in the 1980s, shared with BuzzFeed that while auditioning alongside Kilmer for the 1991 drama The Doors, a biographical film about the famous rock band, Kilmer allegedly punched her in the face during their audition scene. Even worse, the film's director, Oliver Stone — who's recently been accused by numerous women of sexual assault — allegedly just stood by and allowed it to happen.

“When I got to the room and Val Kilmer picked me up and [shook] me, throwing me down to the floor, Stone just stood there the whole time laughing," O'Heaney alleges, noting that the scene involved a verbal but not a physical altercation, BuzzFeed reports. "I went down to my car and I cried for about 20 minutes." As a result of this alleged incident, O’Heaney says she filed a police report and that she was eventually rewarded a settlement from the film's production company for $24,500, according to BuzzFeed.

However, O'Heaney alleges that the only way she would be able to receive the money was to sign an NDA — a compromise she quickly regretted, she says. “I was so traumatized that, against my better judgment, I signed that document, which says I can never speak about this,” she told BuzzFeed. “If this was something that happened nowadays, I wouldn’t sign it.”

O’Heaney says that witnessing countless women speaking out against Weinstein, as well as other alleged serial Hollywood harassers, is what encouraged her to break her agreement now. “Women have come together, saying, ‘We’re not going to be f*cked by you,’” she continued. “I finally have the confidence to speak about this. It’s too long that I’ve sat on this story.” While Kilmer has yet to comment on the allegations, the lawyer Kilmer and Stone shared during the time of the audition tells BuzzFeed that this instance cannot be equated with sexual abuse and harassment in the workplace. “I have no hesitation in stating this is not one of them … for sure," he said.